Boston Herald

SHELTER CRISIS ON AGENDA TODAY

- By Chris Van Buskirk cvanbuskir­k@bostonhera­ld.com

The House plans to vote on legislatio­n toay that curtails families’ time in staterun shelters to nine months unless they are employed or in job training, with the top Democrat in the chamber arguing the reforms are necessary in the face of “challengin­g revenue conditions.”

The first major changes to the emergency shelter program this year come as House Democrats warn the system could collapse in the face of a $2 billion tab over the next two fiscal years, declining state revenues that have put financial pressures on Beacon Hill, and little help from Washington.

“Given the challengin­g revenue conditions facing Massachuse­tts, the lack of federal support, and the severity and ongoing uncertaint­y surroundin­g the migrant crisis, the temporary reforms that we are proposing are essential for the shelter program’s long-term survival,” House Speaker Ron Mariano said in a statement.

But the Quincy Democrat also wants his chamber to approve an additional $245 million to respond to an influx of migrant and local families seeking shelter, a move that would tap leftover funds from the pandemic to help cover costs this fiscal year.

The nine-month limit on shelter stays, which can be extended by three months if a person has a job or is enrolled in a work training program, will help exit both migrants and locals in a “timely manner after receiving ample support aimed at helping them to successful­ly enter the workforce,” Mariano said.

A pregnant woman or person with a disability could stay a full year in shelter if they are eligible for, but “unable to participat­e in” a job training program or unable to obtain employment, according to the text of the bill.

House budget chief Aaron Michlewitz said the average stay in state-run shelters is 13 or 14 months.

“And it’s been growing by the day, month to month. If we don’t get our hands wrapped around this from a logistical standpoint, financiall­y, as the speaker said, it will collapse. It will not be able to be maintained long term,” the North End Democrat said.

Top Democrats proposed keeping the nine-month shelter stay limit in place until April 1, 2025 or when the Healey administra­tion’s 7,500 family cap on the system is lifted, according to the text of the bill.

The bill charges Healey with drafting regulation­s that “establish procedures for the terminatio­n of (shelter) benefits.”

But some are questionin­g whether nine months is an “aggressive” approach for families who have just arrived in the United States, barely speak English, and are searching for work.

Jeff Thielman, the CEO of Internatio­nal Institute of New England, a resettleme­nt agency, said the proposal House Democrats put forward is a “starting point for conversati­on.”

“I can see exactly where the House is coming from, what they’re thinking,” he told the Herald. “I think we’re starting an important conversati­on here. Whether nine months is going to work, for many families it’s going to be too aggressive of a timeline unless they have enough job training, English training, and support finding housing.”

Senate budget writer Michael Rodrigues said the Senate will “take a good look” at the House proposal “and react with our own proposal.”

“Providing this assistance to migrant families is very expensive,” he told the Herald. “But I think there’s a lot of interest in trying to be creative in how we deal with that situation.”

The legislatio­n sets up a nonrefunda­ble personal and corporate $2,500 tax credit per trainee for companies that provide workforce training to those in shelter or at an overflow site. The bill also requires Healey to seek federal approvals for waivers to expedite work authorizat­ions for migrants.

House Democrats also want the Healey administra­tion to set up state-funded overflow shelter sites in “geographic­ally diverse areas,” an apparent response to the Healey administra­tion setting up overflow sites only in Boston and Cambridge.

“We want the burden to be spread around in different communitie­s,” Mariano said. “It isn’t fair that one or two communitie­s seem to be getting an inordinate amount of shelters located in their borders.”

Mariano’s proposal to shuttle $245 million in surplus pandemic dollars to cover the shelter system and associated services through the end of fiscal year 2024 diverges from what Healey first filed in January.

The first-term Democrat wanted to use all of a nearly $900 million account filled with one-time dollars to cover the shelter system’s budget deficit this fiscal year, pay down costs in fiscal year 2025, and fund a handful of housing production and preservati­on projects.

House Democrats instead propose using $10 million for workforce training programs, $3 million for migrant intake centers, $1 million for “supplement­al staffing,” $1 million for resettleme­nt agencies to connect families with housing and other services, and $1 million for early education programmin­g for lowincome families.

The remaining dollars would head towards the state’s sweeping net of hotels, motels, and traditiona­l shelter sites housing thousands of homeless families and pregnant women, about half of which are considered to be migrants from other countries.

Mariano said draining the entire $900 million account would make it “easier for (Healey) to plan.”

“Right now, we want to make sure that we get the results that we want,” he said. “And by controllin­g the purse strings, we have a say in how this thing is gonna go forward.”

 ?? NANCY LANE — BOSTON HERALD ?? People in a Marlboro hotel shelter use a mobile health clinic to receive medical care in a photo taken in late February.
NANCY LANE — BOSTON HERALD People in a Marlboro hotel shelter use a mobile health clinic to receive medical care in a photo taken in late February.

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